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from:
The Los Angeles Times
June
BENEFIT REUNITES
PUNKERS FOR (MOSTLY) ACOUSTIC SETS
If you ask a bunch of punk-rockers
even punk-rockers 15 years beyond their sneering prime
to tone things down for an acoustic show, you just know
that somewhere along the way one of them is going to mess it
up.
Sure enough, Sunday afternoon's
"The Masque Unplugged" concert, a class reunion of
L.A.'s storied punk-rock bands of the late '70's, erupted with
a spasm of the old anarchy when the Skulls disregarded the acoustic
edict and let fly with some fuzz-guitar punk. The energy jumped
a notch higher when they replaced their faulty drum machine with
a drummer from the audience and charged through their old "Victim"
and the Randoms' "Let's Get Rid of New York."
If the rest of the four hour-plus
event was sedate by comparison, well, that was just another incongruous
element in a day marked by incongruities: once-wild performers
strumming acoustic guitars, formerly disenchanted youth turning
out to support a political office seeker (the sold-out event
raised more than $3000 for City Council candidate Jackie Goldberg).
And the site, the old Silver
Lake area flamenco restaurant El Cid, was a long way in ambience
from Hollywood's subterranean Masque, the cradle of L.A.'s original
punk-rock movement. That scene generated many great bands, some
big stars and many a minor legend who exerted influence and then
faded from sight.
Some of the biggest names,
such as X and members of the Go Go's, were unable to appear Sunday
because of prior commitments, according to organizer Nicole Panter
of the Bohemian Women's Political Alliance, but this audience
wasn't on a star search. Someone quipped that it was like "a
high school reunion of all the really bad kids," but the
constant hugs and shrieks of recognition seemed truly sweet.
These punks were a micro-generation earlier than the rougher,
rawer Black Flag brigade, and their anger and alienation were
informed by humor, self-awareness and irony. On Sunday, they
seemed downright sentimental.
More than a dozen acts played
short sets in the briskly moving program. Not surprisingly, the
ones that fared best musically were the ones that are still working
bands. The Last's folk-rock-cum-garage-rock style translated
especially well to the acoustic format, and, like many of the
performers, the trio combined the nostalgic with the current
by following an old punk anthem with a new tune, this one about
the Gulf War.
Alice Armendariz, who was known
as Alice Bag when she fronted the Bags, is a member of the popular
Latin female trio Las Tres, and she offered a folk-jazz-cabaret
treatment of X Ray Spex's punk-rock classic "Oh Bondage
Up Yours!" Many of the performers demonstrated that when
you play punk acousticaly, you get something that sounds a bit
like early Dylan.
The Screamers, the Alleycats'
Randy Stodola, the Skulls, the Zeros, the Flesh Eaters, Peter
Case, Geza X it was like a comprehensive compilation album
come to life, and, while the musical quality itself varied wildly,
the point of the day was larger than that. Artists who questioned
the future so potently 15 years ago discovered that it does exist
and that their community endures.
Richard Cromelin
[Joe sez: That "trio"
Last that performed was me, Luke & brother David]
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